British elections – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Sun, 15 Dec 2019 15:40:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg British elections – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 UK Jews breathe easy after Johnson trounces Corbyn, who announces resignation https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/12/13/uk-jews-breathe-easy-after-johnson-trounces-corbyn/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/12/13/uk-jews-breathe-easy-after-johnson-trounces-corbyn/#respond Fri, 13 Dec 2019 05:20:16 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=444479 Britain's Conservative prime minister, Boris Johnson, won the UK general election on Thursday and secured a large majority in Parliament, which will pave the way for Britain to leave the European Union in the next few months. While exit polls published immediately after the polls closed Thursday show the Conservatives winning 368 seats, with a […]

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Britain's Conservative prime minister, Boris Johnson, won the UK general election on Thursday and secured a large majority in Parliament, which will pave the way for Britain to leave the European Union in the next few months.

While exit polls published immediately after the polls closed Thursday show the Conservatives winning 368 seats, with a majority of 86 MPs – 50 more than the party won in the 2017 election, when Johnson's predecessor, Theresa May, was forced to establish a minority government that was unable to move ahead with Brexit – the party won an actual 320 seats, according to the official results published early Friday.

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Boris Johnson said, "Thank you to everyone across our great country who voted, who volunteered, who stood as candidates. We live in the greatest democracy in the world."

"I think this will turn out to be a historic election that gives us now, in this new government, the chance to respect the democratic will of the British people," Johnson said after winning his seat of Uxbridge.

He said the Conservatives appeared to have won "a powerful new mandate to get Brexit done."

Meanwhile, Britain's Jewish community appears to be breathing a sigh of relief. Labour, which under current leader Jeremy Corbyn has been awash in accusations that it has failed to investigate or combat the swell in anti-Semitism seen among its MPs and activists, won only 194 seats, 67 fewer than it had in the most recent Parliament and the lowest number of seats for Labour since 1935.

Britain's PM and Conservative Party leader Boris Johnson leaves Conservative Party headquarters in London, early Friday (AP/Thanassis Stavrakis) AP/Thanassis Stavrakis

"This is obviously a very disappointing night for the Labour Party with the result that we've got," Corbyn said after being reelected in his own north London electoral seat. He said he would not lead the party in any future elections.

Weary Labour candidates taking in the scale of their defeat said his leadership had played a major role in the defeat.

A member of the Labour shadow government called the election results catastrophic for the party and for Britain as a whole.

It appears that the third-largest party in Parliament will be the Scottish National Party, which won 44 seats, followed by the Liberal Democrats, who won a mere 13. The Greens secured one seat, and independent candidates won 22.

According to the exit polls, some 5.4% of Labour voters cast ballots for the Conservative Party on Thursday, the largest-ever migration across that party line.

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For British Jews, Election Day is a day of fear https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/12/12/for-british-jews-election-day-is-a-day-of-fear/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/12/12/for-british-jews-election-day-is-a-day-of-fear/#respond Thu, 12 Dec 2019 16:44:14 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=444455 In one of the most bitterly and closest fought elections in recent memory, the United Kingdom went to the polls Thursday, to select new members of parliament. Many were uninspired by the choice in front of them; either a Boris Johnson-led Conservative Party government or a Jeremy Corbyn-led Labour Party one. Follow Israel Hayom on […]

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In one of the most bitterly and closest fought elections in recent memory, the United Kingdom went to the polls Thursday, to select new members of parliament. Many were uninspired by the choice in front of them; either a Boris Johnson-led Conservative Party government or a Jeremy Corbyn-led Labour Party one.

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A snapshot of the tweets and opinion pieces from British Jews reveals the dread that the community feels about the potential prospect of the latter. Allegations and evidence of outright anti-Semitism have swirled around both the party – its MPs and councillors – and the leader himself over the last few years. The fact that Corbyn is still the leader of the Labour Party and is in with a shout of sneaking the UK's top political position is deeply upsetting. 

In fact, the front page of the Jewish News encapsulated the mood with a front page imploring voters to not vote Labour.

The Israel Advocacy Movement, tweeted footage of a group of Jewish anti-racist activists subjected to a torrent of anti-Semitic abuse at Jeremy Corbyn's closing party.

Labour Against Anti-Semitism tweeted that in its opinion, the Jeremy Corbyn-led Labour Party was institutionally anti-Jewish and that it was unfit for government.

Michael Dickson, a former UK resident and now executive director of Israel advocacy group StandWithUS tweeted his appreciation to non-Jewish British friends, who have reached out to him to express solidarity with the beleaguered Jewish community.

Author and weekly Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland, whose mother was a Holocaust survivor, tweeted about the status of a heavily Jewish constituency – Finchley and Golders Green. He acknowledged there were two things there that people agreed upon; admiration for the bravery of Luciana Berger, the Liberal Democrat candidate who was hounded out of the Labour Party for being an unrepentant Jew and that it is barely credible that this is even an issue in a UK election in 2019.

And David Collier, who is an anti-Semitism campaigner online, tweeted that 280 characters were not enough to put into words what his feelings were. He identified that whatever the outcome, he would never feel the same about the country of his birth again.

Ben Ari, writing in the Evening Standard, remarked that he is Jewish and his wife's family is Muslim-Iranian. He declared his intent to spoil his ballot paper, ending a 100-year chain of voting for Labour, but no longer, and all because of anti-Semitism.

"Jewish families in Britain, my own included, need the NHS, social care, affordable housing and better job opportunities as much as anyone else, yet it feels like we are the only ethnic minority being forced to make a choice between our identity and our politics," he wrote. 

The polls suggest that the Conservatives lead over Labour is down into single digits – and that the result may just be too close to call. Will Johnson and the Conservatives get over the line?

Will Corbyn come from behind and lead a Labour victory?

Will there be a hung parliament, with neither of the two main political parties having a majority? Or, will there be another coalition government – possibly the Scottish National Party and Labour? Everyone, but possibly the Jewish community most of all, is waiting with bated breath.

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